Thursday, March 10, 2011

JEFFERSON CITY (MISSOURI DIGITAL NEWS) - Missouri driving tests would be administered only in English under a bill approved by the House.

The House gave first-round approval Wednesday to allow driving tests to be administered only in English. Currently, the driving test can be taken in 12 languages, including English. The bill sponsor, Rep. Jerry Nolte, R-Gladstone, said the bill would make Missouri roads safer by requiring the driving test to be administered in the same language that appears on street signs.

"At the highway speeds, people need to understand what the signs written in English say, really quickly," Nolte said in a previous interview about his bill.

Nolte also said his bill would save the states from lawsuits for not offering tests in certain languages besides English. Nolte said the state of Oklahoma was sued in 2007 for not offering a test in Farsi.

"We would be saving ourselves from liability," Nolte said.

Talboy said he wasn't buying the argument.

"We are fearing a lawsuit that hasn't happened yet...this would be a ruse," Talboy said.

Some lawmakers expressed concern that the bill would deprive immigrants of necessary means to work.

"This seems counter-intuitive ... this is not only insulting but cruel," Talboy said.

Nolte said, "Driving is a privilege, not a right."

Opponents said the bill would strip the Highway Patrol, which administers the driving test, of their autonomy.

Rep. Sara Lampe, D-Springfield, said that 10,000 driving tests were administered in a language other than English last year. Of those tests, Lampe said only 3,000 test-takers were given their driver's license.

"We need to trust the guys in the uniform ... [this bill] would be in slap in the face to Highway Patrol," Lampe said.

The House also discussed an abortion bill that would prohibit late-term abortions in Missouri. The House took no action on the bill Wednesday and will take it up at a later session.

The English-only driving bill passed and it needs one more round of approval from the House before moving to the Senate.